Nutrition and Feeding
Optimal sheep flock productivity and growth are only possible if you give your sheep an adequate diet consisting of water, carbohydrates and fats, proteins, minerals, and vitamins. You may need to include additional nutrients when required. Sheep feeding and nutrition requirements are dependent on animal age and gender.
In this section, you’ll find a range of information relating to the management of sheep nutrition, feeding and delivery, testing water quality, and estimating a flock's water needs. Whether you’re raising a small flock of sheep for your own needs or going into full-scale production, you’ll find tips on accelerated lamb production, how to manage parasites with good nutrition, and much more.
Sheep Feed Management
Knowing how, when, and what to feed your flock is one of the most important things to learn for anyone wanting to raise sheep. Sheep also need an adequate supply of fresh, clean water. When feeding your flock, the ultimate goal is to keep your sheep healthy while also keeping costs low. One option is to integrate trees, livestock, and forage crops together on the same land to create dual income from livestock and timber, using a process called silvopasture.
Pasture is a term used to describe a well-managed grazing system containing improved grasses and some legumes. During the summer, cool-season grasses slow down their growth, which can cause problems for grazers. Sheep farmers must pay careful attention in order to avoid overgrazing. Good grazing management can also minimize the impact of parasites when combined with genetic selection.
Supplementary feeding of sheep may be necessary when pastures are deficient in energy and protein. The manufactured feed has to meet FDA requirements for the development and implementation of a modern, preventive, and risk-based system for food safety. This is stated within the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA).
Weaning is another occasion when you may be required to introduce special feeding procedures. Adopting the best weaning practices limits the stress to both ewes and lambs in the flock.
Sheep Pasture and Forage Management
Whatever pasture and forage management program you decide to adopt for your sheep flock, the most important factor is that it achieves an appropriate balance between available feed ingredients. It’s therefore crucial to know the nutrient content, especially when it comes to forages and forage quality management. Various methods of feed analysis are available and can help you determine whether sheep nutrient requirements are being met. Minerals such as calcium are essential for supporting skeletal and nervous system functions.
Forage quality is the basis of animal health in a grazing system. Quality is impacted by plant development and the timing of grazing. You can integrate warm-season annuals into cool-season perennial grazing to improve the quality of the grazing. An effective grazing management system can also include grazing crop residues and cover crops.
A pasture can comprise many different kinds of plants, not all of which will be beneficial for your flock. During the summer, in particular, the risk of poisonous plants in pastures increases. Being able to recognize and manage plants such as poison hemlock is crucial.
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WorkshopsFree
Pasture Walks with Extension: Beef and Sheep
When 06/22/2026Length 1 hour, 30 minutesEvent Format In-PersonExplore pasture management with Penn State Extension and gain practical insight into rotational grazing, pasture evaluation, and forage identification at a working beef and sheep operation. -
ArticlesUsing EBV Data to Promote Parasite Resistance
Internal parasites have been an issue in sheep production for a long time. Using Estimated Breeding Values allows producers to identify individual sheep with resistance to internal parasites. -
ArticlesSheep Safety and Quality Assurance Program (SSQA)
Animal Safety and Quality Assurance Programs are national programs that provide guidelines and strategies for producers to promote animal quality and safety and ensure safe food for human consumption. -
ArticlesPrevent Parasites Through Grazing Management
Grazing management and genetic selection can help your flock minimize the impact of parasites. -
ArticlesWhy Testing Matters: Improving Mineral Nutrition in Sheep Flocks
PA sheep producers often supplement minerals, but without testing, needs may be mismatched. Soil, forage, and animal testing help balance key minerals, improving flock health and reducing feed costs. -
WorkshopsFree
Pasture Walk with Extension: Sheep Farm
When 06/11/2026Length 2 hours, 45 minutesEvent Format In-PersonExplore pasture management at a Penn State Extension pasture walk. Learn soil testing, grazing strategies, and species selection at a working sheep farm. Lunch and an optional meeting follow. -
Workshops$475.00
Preventive Controls for Animal Food
When 05/18/2026Length 2.5 daysEvent Format In-PersonProvides the credentials to meet FDA requirements for development and implementation of a preventive system for food safety as stated within the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) regulations. -
ArticlesFeeding the Flock
Keeping feed costs low while still supplying the necessary nutrients to keep the flock healthy should be the goal of every shepherd. -
ArticlesMultiflora Rose Control in Pastures
The spread of multiflora rose in Pennsylvania caused it to be designated as a noxious weed. Multiflora rose can be controlled but it takes considerable effort. -
ArticlesHave You Tested The Water Lately?
One of the most essential components of a sheep's diet is water. Poor water quality can affect intake, which in turn affects animal growth and milk production. -
ArticlesFeeding and Managing Your Bred Ewe Lambs
Producers often overlook lifetime performance as a production measurement in sheep operations. -
ArticlesDo Your Sheep Receive Optimal Nutrition?
Sheep that receive optimal nutrition are more likely to perform at higher levels than sheep that receive less than optimal nutrition. -
ArticlesBody Condition: One More Evaluation Tool
Body condition, or fat cover, is one more evaluation tool that sheep producers can use to evaluate their sheep flock and management practices. -
ArticlesTest Forages to Ensure Sheep or Goat Performance
Producers should test forages to balance diets that promote good performance from their flock or herd. -
ArticlesHow Much Does That Bale Really Weigh? Feeding and Fertilizer Implications
Accurately estimating bale weights helps producers better plan for winter feeding needs and fertilizer applications to hay fields. -
ArticlesBenefits of Incorporating a Coccidiostat in Creep Feed for Lambs and Kids
Overview of the benefits of incorporating a coccidiostat into the creep feed of lambs and kids to increase performance and prevent clinical disease. -
ArticlesHow's Your Forage Quality This Year?
Producers should test forages in order to correctly balance rations to meet sheep nutritional requirements. -
ArticlesSilvopasture Could Work on Your Farm
Silvopasture is the integration of trees, livestock, and forage crops together on the same land to create dual income from timber and livestock. -
ArticlesMonitor Body Condition Scoring and Nutrition throughout Pregnancy
Meeting ewe nutritional requirements becomes especially important throughout a pregnancy and can impact the health of the ewe and the health and vigor of the newborn lamb. -
ArticlesAre Your Sheep Consuming Enough Calcium?
Minerals are essential to support skeletal and nervous system functions. But, have you balanced your current mineral program lately with the forages and other feeds that your sheep are consuming? -
ArticlesSampling Bales for Forage Quality Analysis
Testing stored forages for nutritional quality is an important management consideration in livestock nutrition. Sampling bales involves a few simple steps to get a representative sample. -
ArticlesNutrition Throughout Pregnancy for Sheep Flocks
Nutrition can impact productivity of a sheep flock through ewe productivity and through lamb vigor. -
ArticlesJapanese Stiltgrass in Pastures
This invasive weed is taking over Pennsylvania pastures. Learn how to control it.




